The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Historic building vandals punished

Courthouse taggers can avoid conviction­s by writing essays and paying restitutio­n for handprints

- By Brian Rokos

Five people accused of vandalizin­g the 120-year-old Riverside County courthouse in downtown Riverside with green handprints will receive a self-taught history lesson as part of a diversion program that will allow them to escape a vandalism conviction for causing thousands of dollars in damage.

Alexander Jacob Castro, Alexandria Ty Fite, Elise Saramariel­le Kelder and Oliver Edu Solares Herrera were among a dozen people arrested in July 2022 after investigat­ors say they used green paint to leave handprints on walls, windows and pillars of the Historic Courthouse.

Aida Yagmur Aston and Kamile Dincsoy were charged with committing similar offenses that were perpetrate­d previously.

All pleaded not guilty except for Dincsoy, who has a warrant out for her arrest, court records show.

They were part of the “Rise Up 4 Abortion Rights” protest held on the evening of July 30, 2022. A Riverside County sheriff’s deputy wrote in a court filing that he counted 100 handprints on the ornate courthouse, which is modeled after the Grand Palais in Paris and is on the Riverside County Historical Commission’s list of historic landmarks.

The defendants were originally charged with felonies, but the District Attorney’s Office agreed to reduce them to misdemeano­rs, John Hall, a DA’S spokesman, said Friday.

But Superior Court Judge Jason Armand went beyond that, over the objection of the DA’S Office, and granted Aston, Castro, Fite, Kelder and Solares Herrera a diversion program that if completed, will result in no conviction at all.

They are each required to write one essay on three subjects: The history of the courthouse, important rulings made there (Cheat sheet: There’s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States